• chiliedogg@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    I worked at a major outdoors retailer with a “gun library” of high-end firearms.

    In one of our quarterly steel audits (where we pull all 10,000 guns put hands on them, verify the serials, etc) we discovered a $10,000 rifle was missing.

    The thing is, the case it was in obscured the gun itself from the security cameras. It was behind like 6 other guns in a glass case any customer could item and pull the guns out to look at them (guns themselves were trigger-locked of course).

    So we had to have the gun library manager sit there and watch 3 month’s of surveillance video of a specific case that was proclaimed opened 20 times an hour in a highly-trafficked area of the store. Because of all the activity, the video had to be watched in real time, and we were open 13 hours a day.

    The manager ended up quitting over the boredom combined with stress.

    • theangryseal@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Oh god, yeah I’d be out. I would not do that.

      Watching surveillance is truly like watching paint dry. Realtime? Yeah, just shoot me.

      The only time I ever struggled was when cash went missing and I had to watch sale for sale. Even then, I could fast forward.

      I always went for voids and “nosales” first. Nine times out of ten that’s where I’d find the theft. More clever thieves made my life hell though.